Afghanistan’s finance ministry under the Taliban government has prepared a draft national budget that, for the first time in two decades, is funded without foreign aid, a spokesman said. It comes as the country is mired in an economic crisis and faces a looming humanitarian catastrophe that the United Nations (UN) has called an Finance ministry spokesman Ahmad Wali Haqmal did not disclose the size of the draft budget – which runs until December 2022 – but told AFP it would go to the cabinet for approval before being published. “We are trying to finance it from our domestic revenues – and we believe we can,” he told state television in an interview shared on Twitter. Global donors suspended financial aid when the Taliban seized power in August and Western powers also froze access to billions of dollars in assets held abroad. The 2021 budget, put together by the previous administration under guidance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), projected a deficit despite 219 billion Afghanis ($2.7 billion at the time) in aid and grants and 217 billion from domestic revenue.
متعلقہ مضامین
-
IMF offered harder terms to Pakistan after change in economic team, says ex-finance secretary
-
‘Hacked’ Twitter of Pakistan’s Serbia embassy criticises PM
-
PWDs deserve access to education and jobs: Alvi
-
NAB opposes acquittal plea of Gilani, Ashraf in chairman OGRA appointment reference
-
China supports Pakistan’s efforts in timely completion of CPEC: envoy
-
Drug Abuse: Unstated Challenge to the Progress of Pakistan
-
Pakistan’s New York consulate expands online services for expatriates
-
Religious fanaticism time bomb needed to be defused: Fawad
-
Pakistani woman abused by a UK civil servant in mortgage case inquiry
-
Protection of lives, property government’s priority: Farrukh
-
Sindh Culture Day has become an Int’l event: Ghani
-
Church leaders grieved by Sri Lankan national’s lynching